10 Hot Trends in Cloud Data for 2012

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on December 21st, 2011
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As 2011 rolls to a close, it’s time to make a few predictions for 2012 in the cloud data space. 2011 was a year of adoption, during which many companies started to leverage the cloud, enjoying the economies of scale, security and ease in managing their growing data needs. Those successes promise even greater cloud adoption in 2012. With that in mind, here are 10  predictions for hot trends to watch for in the cloud data space:

  1. Hybrid data storage environments combining cloud storage with existing storage. For most companies, the notion of moving all of their data to the cloud is not fathomable. However, continuously expanding data storage needs are fueling a need for more capacity. What better way to address this need than with cloud storage? The benefits include access to a secure, limitless pool of storage capacity, no future need for upgrade or replacement and reduced capital expenses. Look for auto-tiering technologies to seamlessly combine hybrid cloud and on-premise environments in a way that operates with existing applications.
  2. Private cloud environments in enterprise companies. Enterprises looking to leverage the economies, efficiencies and scale of cloud providers are adopting cloud models in-house, such as OpenStack, for both compute and storage environments. These private clouds offer scale, agility and price/performance typically unmatched by traditional infrastructure solutions and can reside inside a company’s firewall. In the storage space, look for technologies that can combine existing SAN infrastructure and private cloud storage into a unified Cloud SAN.
  3. Disaster recovery to the cloud as a viable option. Traditionally, companies that need disaster recovery (DR) and business continuity (BC) have relied on dedicated replicated infrastructure at an offsite location to be able to recover from physical disaster. This means paying for idle hardware that’s waiting for a disaster. DR in the cloud, on the other hand, means not having to pay for this infrastructure except when it is needed. The tradeoff? While not necessarily a zero-downtime solution, look for cloud DR with recovery time objectives (RTOs) in a matter of hours.
  4. Disaster recovery from the cloud as a new need. What happens to business data stored by SaaS application in the case of a disaster? The truth is most SaaS providers do have a DR strategy, but many businesses will demand a recovery strategy under their control. Look for emergence of solutions that backup SaaS data either locally or to an alternate provider as an extra level of protection.
  5. Simplified onboarding of applications to the cloud. Certain business applications can move entirely to the cloud, thereby saving the administrative and maintenance headaches of their hardware/software platforms onsite. Many IT-strapped businesses can benefit from tools to make this migration viable. Look for robust tool sets that can migrate applications to a choice of cloud providers – and also bring those applications back on-premise should the need arise.
  6. Non-relational databases for big data. NoSQL databases, like Apache CouchDB, enable tremendous scalability in order to meet the needs of Terabytes and Petabytes of data accessed by millions of users. Big data will force many companies to consider these alternatives to traditional databases and cloud deployment models will simplify the roll-out. Look for vendors providing supported NoSQL solutions.
  7. Use of the cloud for analytics. Analytics tend to require a scalable compute and storage environment as well as rather expensive software. Similar to idle hardware for disaster recovery purposes, analytics for many businesses may represent a seasonal need that only runs in short bursts and may not justify purchasing a dedicated software/hardware environment. Analytic environments in the cloud can turn the expense into a “pay-per-use” bill, meeting business goals at a far lower price point.
  8. SSD tiers of storage in the cloud. Moving higher performance applications into the cloud doesn’t always guarantee that they will get the level of performance they need from their data storage. By offering high-performance tiers of storage that are SSD-based (i.e. flash), cloud providers will be able to address the needs for predictable and faster application response times.
  9. Improvements in data reduction technology. With cloud storage commanding a per GB operating expense, deduplication and compression technologies have become rather ubiqitous in minimizing costs. While some may argue the capacity optimization game has played out, there is still the challenge of capacity optimization on a more global scale across multiple tenants and a challenge for rich media content which does not fare particularly well with today’s reduction technologies. Look for the introduction of new data reduction technologies that address both needs.
  10. Cloud-envy” from cloud laggards. While many companies have already adopted the cloud and many more will adopt in 2012, others may still wait and ponder well past 2012. Regardless of which category a company falls into, the economics and efficiencies of the cloud have become irrefutable. As a result, some of the laggards will likely seek ways to leverage cloud methodologies that improve IT efficiency on-premise. Undoubtedly, some will fall prey to cloudwashing by purchasing traditional IT infrastructure named “cloud” in an attempt to satisfy their “cloud-envy.”

Bottom line? Cloud deployments are becoming simpler and more secure and the economics continue to improve. Which of these trends will your business follow in 2012?

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The Remote Office Data Storage Quandary: Is Cloud the Answer?

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on December 14th, 2011
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If you ask IT administrators about their goals for storage infrastructure at remote and/or branch office (ROBO) locations, you’ll likely hear that they want to improve application performance and, at the same time, minimize the footprint of remote office storage infrastructure.  However, maximizing performance and minimizing footprint are competing priorities and optimizing both can be a challenge.

Having a goal to remove or minimize remote office storage infrastructure makes a lot of sense. Given most remote locations no longer have dedicated IT staffing onsite, an increased and significant burden can be avoided for the administrators working at main locations.

Improving overall application performance at remote offices also makes a lot of sense to maximize productivity of remote workers. The good news?  There currently exists in the marketplace a category of devices that provides local speed data storage access with a very small footprint: cloud storage gateways. Even better, CloudArray, an enterprise storage gateway from TwinStrata, enables local speed iSCSI access to a broad choice of public cloud storage providers, private cloud storage providers and/or existing storage, representing one of the the industry’s most flexible storage solutions.

A recent 2011 ESG survey of remote office and branch office environments revealed that a third of remote offices with over 25 employees had an average of 25TB of data at each remote office, a considerable amount of storage to maintain and manage. Taking a closer look, the following pie chart breaks down remote office storage infrastructure by type:

According to the survey results, 56% of storage deployed at ROBOs consists of SAN or NAS storage, reflecting the priority for local speed data access at those locations. The tradeoff is that managing enterprise storage infrastructure at those locations can lead to a number of headaches around

  • Hardware life cycles and upgrades
  • Running out of and replenishing capacity
  • Providing backup, replication or disaster recovery for the data stored at each site

Enterprise storage gateways are a great way to consolidate remote site storage footprint to software-only installations or small form-factor appliances while, at the same time, maintaining the plug-compatibility, speed and capacity of local storage infrastructure. Moreover, consolidation allows administrators to centralize data storage at a primary data center or in the cloud with the following advantages

  • A local iSCSI interface at each site without the iSCSI storage array footprint
  • Data reduction (compression and deduplication) before data is sent to the primary site or cloud, increasing usable centralized capacity
  • Ability to re-allocate capacity simply and dynamically between remote sites without moving hardware
  • Ability to maintain a cache or a full local copy that is replicated to the primary site or cloud for a multi-site disaster recovery strategy

Finally, a software enterprise storage gateway can be deployed virtually anywhere in the world in minutes, without additional hardware, allowing IT to rapidly meet ever-changing business needs.

If you are concerned about making the tradeoff between infrastructure footprint and performance for ROBO environments, it may be time to consider the benefits of an enterprise storage gateway solution.

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HP Partner, TwinStrata, Offers Their View on HP Cloud Services

Posted by admin on December 6th, 2011
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The following article was contributed by Margot Rudell from the HP Scaling the Cloud Blog.

From time to time, we’ll post articles about how specific partners and customers use HP Cloud Services.  Today, I’d like to introduce TwinStrata’s CEO and co-founder Nicos Vekiarides and Engineering Manager Mark Aldred.

Nicos co-founded TwinStrata four years ago to bring cloud storage to market in a way that is easy for enterprise customers to use. Today, TwinStrata delivers connectivity to cloud storage with an easy to use web-based user interface and a pay as you go business model.

TwinStrata’s CloudArray 3.0 appliance provides access to cloud storage so that it performs seamlessly with customers’ existing IT infrastructure.  The appliance makes cloud storage an attractive option for those enterprise customers, who lack the time to use online storage on their own through APIs. Customers use CloudArray for backup and archiving, offsite storage capacity, and disaster recovery.

According to Nicos, TwinStrata chose to work with HP Cloud Services for three reasons.

First, HP Cloud Services is a good match for TwinStrata, as HP will deliver reliable cloud computing and cloud storage offerings that enterprise customers can trust.

Second, open source software is attractive to application developers and businesses of all sizes, and HP Cloud Services integrates key elements of OpenStack, the emerging standard for open source cloud infrastructure.

Thirdly, working with HP Cloud Services will broaden TwinStrata’s customer market. Through TwinStrata’s CloudArray appliance, traditional hardware and software enterprise customers will soon have access to a business grade cloud provided by HP Cloud Services for their storage needs.

Since HP Cloud Services is still in private beta, TwinStrata is aggressively testing HP Cloud Services’ performance and functionality. Nicos and Mark indicated that HP Cloud Services is performing well in TwinStrata’s tests. “While still in private beta, HP Cloud Services is already very reliable and comparable to other public clouds. We are already impressed,” said Mark Aldred, Engineering Manager, TwinStrata.  Nicos, Mark, and the TwinStrata team said they are happy with they’ve seen, including the high performance levels and the speed with which they were able to make progress. Benchmark tests of HP Cloud Services versus other cloud services have been positive.  Functional testing of HP Cloud Services has been quick and easy, and the RESTful APIs work exactly as expected. HP Cloud Services’ online forum community is already active and responsive. Mark told us that he was very impressed that he received a very accurate response to a question he posted in the HP Cloud Services forum in less than an hour.

Welcome, TwinStrata! We’re pleased to have you as part of the HP Cloud Services family.

A growing number of customers and partners have already joined the HP Cloud Services ecosystem. If you’re already an HP Cloud Services private beta customer or partner, come tell us your story, share and comment on this article. Feel free to tweet this article or share it through Facebook and LinkedIn. If you’re not yet signed up to participate in our private beta, come join us. Sign up now.

PS: Download a free trial of TwinStrata CloudArray cloud storage gateway for instant iSCSI access to HP cloud storage beta.

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Is it Time to Look Beyond the Cloud?

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on December 1st, 2011
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For many businesses that haven’t yet formulated their cloud adoption plans, the notion of looking beyond the cloud may sound a bit peculiar. After all, isn’t cloud the final frontier that promises to transform traditional IT infrastructure into a control panel offering limitless resources on-demand? That is certainly the outcome that many businesses aspire to. The truth is, regardless of the outcome, much can be gleaned from examining how cloud infrastructure influences business IT efficiencies.

Let’s take a look at public cloud storage and how it has inspired new ways of thinking when it comes to storage infrastructure management. For some, it may be difficult to look beyond the logistics of public cloud storage which often dictate moving data into a distant data center and relinquishing a certain amount of control. However, the benefits of adopting the cloud bring IT efficiencies that could not be otherwise realized, eliminating one of the more burdensome aspects of data storage management.

What burdensome aspect is that? Specifically, the sprawl of storage infrastructure

  • In the primary data center – Storage arrays have a recurring life cycle that demands upgrading and replacing equipment on a regular basis as capacity needs increase.  The process is costly, disruptive, risky and causes overlap of equipment costs, underutilization and overpayment for unused capacity. Read all about the storage array lifecycle here and learn how a large school system changed that pattern once and for all.
  • In the remote office or branch office – While recent surveys such as ESG’s Remote Office/Branch Office Technology Trends show that a large number of businesses would prefer to centralize their data storage, the numbers reveal that most still have data storage at remote sites, primarily consisting of SAN or NAS devices. This not only perpetuates the management lifecycle described above, but does so for unmanned sites with no dedicated administrative staff, clearly an IT management nightmare.
  • For disaster recovery – Replicated storage infrastructure for disaster recovery costs as much to purchase, run and maintain as primary storage infrastructure and has the same life cycle issues described above, not to mention redundant and costly facilities.
  • For peaks and valleys in demand – Here, storage infrastructure remains primarily idle and unused except when capacity needs increase for certain projects, testing, development or analytics that may occur seasonally

The solution for this sprawl does not necessarily involve moving all storage infrastructure to the cloud. For many businesses, that is simply not a practical, realistic or fathomable near-term solution. However, the consolidation of storage infrastructure is clearly a viable strategy.

A reasonable approach might be to leave the main data center as is but start to address data storage sprawl that is occurring in remote locations. What if you could reduce the remote and branch office storage footprint to a single piece of software per site?  What if you could substantially reduce the storage capacity required for disaster recovery while at the same time pooling storage resources to address peaks and valleys in demand? Sprawl would diminish, utilization would improve and administrative burden would lessen.

The cloud can indeed be a means to this end. However, there are other options to consider. For instance, you could use CloudArray as your storage gateway and have a choice of consolidating the sprawl to a public cloud, private cloud, existing storage infrastructure or a combination of all three. Bottom line?  You can reduce sprawl without having to rely on any particular type of cloud, realize significant cost and administrative savings, and replace your ever expanding storage footprint with software, thereby eliminating a complex life cycle.

Keep in mind there is nothing magical about the storage infrastructure that backs cloud storage. Rather, cloud storage is all about the methodologies that squeeze the utmost efficiency out of commoditized storage components, culminating from years of experience on the part of cloud providers.  For this reason, businesses need to look beyond adopting cloud — and instead, look to adopt cloud methodologies that can bring them substantial IT efficiencies.

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Will 2012 be the year of the private cloud?

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on November 21st, 2011
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As business adoption of cloud computing and cloud storage takes hold, new benefits of cloud IT versus traditional IT continue to emerge on a regular basis. One recent example is the Carbon Disclosure Project Study 2011: Cloud Computing – The IT Solution for the 21st Century produced by analyst firm Verdantix.  In the report, not only are the cost advantages of cloud computing discussed but also the resulting reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. Specifically, the study looks at a food and beverage company that is moving an HR application from local IT to the cloud. The model predicts a savings of  $12 million over a 5 year period and a reduction of 30,000 tons in CO2 emissions, simply by moving to the public cloud.

So what does all this have to do with 2012 being the year of the private cloud? Let me explain.  Interestingly enough, the study also concluded that this same company could save $5M and cut CO2 emissions by 25,000 tons over the same time period but this time by moving to a private cloud. While most of us already assume that public clouds are housed in highly efficient “green” data centers with tremendous economies of scale, the private cloud scenario modeled in this report makes a strong statement that improved resource utilization can drive huge benefits even when all infrastructure stays local. The study goes on to cite other efficiencies of cloud architectures including improved time-to-market which also apply to both public and private clouds.

Whether moving to public or private clouds, the bottom line is that businesses can realize substantial benefits from embracing cloud — in overall utilization, cost savings, emission savings, speed and agility. These are compelling benefits that may indeed persuade those who have resisted the move of their IT infrastructure outside of their four walls to deploy their own private clouds. With open source technologies like OpenStack gaining momentum, do we have the perfect storm for mass private cloud adoption in 2012?

While it’s certain that we will see an increase in private cloud adoption, reports like this may prompt many companies to consider incremental changes to their existing infrastructures to make them more efficient and “cloud-like.” That means we’ll likely see more hybrid deployments that leverage existing infrastructure, create more efficient multi-tenant environments, yet provide the ability to expand with public and/or private cloud deployments in the future.

In the data storage space, technologies such as CloudArray enable businesses to leverage existing infrastructure on the path to public cloud, private cloud or a combination of both. Enabling technologies are key for companies looking to leverage cloud efficiencies in incremental ways, particularly for those with an eye to keeping their options open in the future. And those options not only include public and private clouds but also a variety of cloud providers in each category.

So is 2012 the year of the private cloud? More likely, it will be the year of all clouds whether public, private or hybrid. Regardless of the cloud categories you select for use as components of your infrastructure strategy, consider adopting an enabling technology that not only improves your efficiencies today but also provides you with the most flexible path to the future.

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Cloud SANs: What the Data Storage Vendors Forgot

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on November 15th, 2011
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Storage area networks (SANs) have become the ubiquitous deployment model for block data storage systems, interconnecting formerly siloed storage arrays with a common high-speed network running standardized protocols such as Fibre Channel or iSCSI. It was over a decade ago that the ability to connect multi-vendor storage arrays into a common network proved revolutionary and changed the way storage arrays were configured and consumed by businesses. However, with continuing advancements in cloud storage solutions, IT administrators are now rethinking the traditional SAN.

As with many mature technologies, SANs have forced IT administrators to accept a number of limitations. The most notable are

  • The traditional 3-5 year lifecycle of storage arrays, resulting in costly upgrades, frequent migrations and the introduction of considerable business risk
  • The inability to scale performance across geographical distances without storage arrays at each site
  • The inability to easily allocate and re-allocate storage capacity across sites
  • Replication and disaster recovery that require double the number of storage arrays and infrastructure

A combined cloud storage and enterprise cloud storage gateway solution, such as CloudArray, easily overcomes all of these limitations. Pay-as-you-go cloud storage breaks the traditional storage lifecycle offering an unlimited tier of data storage without a need for hardware upgrades, while enterprise storage gateway technology enables secure local-speed performance and iSCSI access from virtually any geographic location with the ability to dynamically allocate/reallocate storage across sites as needed.

TwinStrata’s recent launch of CloudArray 3.0 extends these cloud benefits beyond just public and private clouds — to existing data storage. With CloudArray 3.0, it is easier than ever to build a Cloud SAN that transcends the limitations of existing SANs. Companies can enjoy the attributes of cloud storage immediately using their existing storage as the starting point and, when ready, seamlessly expand their existing storage pool with public and/or private cloud storage.

CloudArray Cloud SAN

Cloud SANs eclipse the limitations of traditional SANs by offering high-performance, optimized data access from virtually anywhere, with a very small local footprint. This makes them ideal for remote offices or other distributed environments. Cloud SANs also offer centralized capacity management and centralized disaster recovery for flexible and robust multi-site deployments.

Key benefits of Cloud SANs include

  • Ability to work with public clouds, private clouds and/or existing storage using software or hardware caching appliances, each with access to virtually unlimited capacity
  • Ability to scale local speed performance across sites without distance limitations
  • Ability to allocate/reallocate storage capacity between sites dynamically, simplifying movement of capacity resources to locations that need them most
  • Built-in consolidated replication and disaster recovery for each caching appliance

As ground-breaking as SANs were when they launched over a decade ago, Cloud SANs represent the next revolutionary step in simplifying deployment of data storage for businesses. Whereas traditional SANs are limited in terms of multi-site scale, capacity utilization and cost, Cloud SANs offer robust, cost-effective solutions that scale geographically and optimize data storage utilization.

Find out just how simple it is to get started with a CloudArray Cloud SAN.

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Thailand Hard Drive Shortage: Can Cloud Storage Help?

Posted by Nicos Vekiarides on October 31st, 2011
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You may have read that Thailand recently experienced its worst flooding on record and, as the producer for about 70% of global demand for hard disk drives (HDDs), there is now a severe shortage of disk drives for data storage and server-related products. With analysts predicting a halt in Thailand’s disk drive production over the next 50+ days, the expected impact to the supply of IT infrastructure products with a dependency on HDDs will surely be significant. Translation?  IT administrators can expect a substantial increase in lead times for new data storage and server equipment.

While cloud storage does not solve the supply shortage of HDDs, it can help IT administrators better cope with the impact. By leveraging excess storage capacity already owned and deployed by cloud providers, it is very simple for organizations to address gaps in demand for storage capacity, without purchasing new storage hardware. Enterprise cloud storage gateways, such as CloudArray, provide access to Terabytes or Petabytes of storage in minutes and can help with both short term capacity demand and longer term peaks and valleys in demand. Those who have not yet adopted enterprise cloud storage shouldn’t lament that they are too late to the party, as software solutions such as CloudArray can be downloaded and deployed immediately, with no need for additional hardware infrastructure.

With a broad choice of cloud providers, local speed performance, encryption with local key management, advanced data reduction, and the look and feel of enterprise storage, there is no better time to consider augmenting an existing data storage strategy with cloud storage. Look for an enterprise gateway that provides all of these features and benefits in a software form factor as the ideal starting point.

One of the major advantages of using the cloud, beyond the frequently touted cost savings, is that it enables organizations to be extremely nimble. A recent article, Don’t Flatline Your Hosting Growth -You Can’t Blame it on Thailand by Tom Millitzer, emphasizes that organizations have to find creative ways to fill the gap left by this natural disaster. For organizations in need of additional storage capacity today, cloud storage is one of those ways.

Find out just how easy it is to expand your storage capacity today.

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